atmosphere
^^ of course, there is the issue of what is meant by 'zero distortion'.
I think it narrows down to obviously having ultra low or no harmonic distortion but more importantly it has to have the absence of dynamic phase errors that fall far below harmonic distortion measurements.
Take for example ground loops and grounding in general.
If you cue up your cartridge with the volume up and listen for noise (hum buzz etc.) it it is dead quite, it does not mean that you do not have a problem with ground loops. The problem caused by some ground loops show up when the music is playing. This is where electromagnetic broadcasts such as current running through your speaker cables can be picked up by a low Z loop that includes your IC's.
The other problem is extremely low level hum (not audible) that is contaminating the phase angles of bass info between 60 to 120 hz.
It dynamically modulates the presented image like a shake table. As a result, the velocity of the sound waves is modulated and the total presentation is perceived as a smear or out of focus.
Amplifier errors in the area of phase distortion must be removed first..
Harmonic distortion only happens when the phase distortion is unchecked.
If you kill the phase errors you kill harmonic distortion.
That's zero distortion.
Roger